Utne Independent Press Award Winner for Arts Coverage: Raw Vision
Raw Vision peers into a curious corner of the art world
Utne Reader January / February 2007
by Keith Goetzman
Outsider artist is one those fuzzy but indispensable terms-like alternative press-that provokes endless debate about just what the heck it means, and about who ought to be lumped under the label. It generally refers to self-taught artists, but not always, and beyond that things get even stickier.
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Consider a few of the artists who have been featured in recent issues of Raw Vision, which calls itself 'the world's leading journal of outsider art, art brut, and contemporary folk art':
- A man from the United States' rural South who filled his yard with brightly colored cut-out figures and whirligigs bedecked with religious slogans.
- A homeless Jamaican painter whose vibrant works include recurring figures of cowboys, fortune-tellers, and boxers, and who says he's the son of Abraham Lincoln.
- A German woman who sabotaged a railway in a 1907 political protest, and who, after she was deemed insane and institutionalized for the act, fashioned a full-size male 'doctor' from burlap and stuffing, and regularly pummeled it. She also made small figures from bread dough and wrote a play.
Clearly, it's an expansive genre, and people in the field love to skirmish at the boundaries between outsider and other terms such as folk, contemporary, naive, raw, visionary, primitive, vernacular, and, when it's applicable, simply art by people with disabilities. Despite their disagreements, many of them agree on one thing: Raw Vision covers this ever-shifting territory nimbly and smartly.
'If you want to know this field, you've got to take Raw Vision,' says Eugene Metcalf, a professor at Miami University in Ohio who has written books and articles about outsider and folk art.
'There isn't any another publication that comes close in terms of timely information about the field,' says Tom di Maria, director of the Creative Growth Art Center in Oakland, California, which provides studio space and instruction for physically, mentally, and developmentally disabled artists. 'I also like its international focus.'
'It does a service in promoting these artists,' says Sherry Pardee, director of the Pardee Collection folk/outsider gallery in Iowa City, Iowa. 'It exposes things to the world that people aren't usually going to see.'
Raw Vision places a premium on its visual presentation of this electrifying art, extending the magazine's appeal beyond the insular art-publishing world. With large and abundant photographs on high-quality stock, Raw Vision is a visual feast akin to 'Christmas pudding,' says contributing editor Roger Cardinal, a British scholar who coined outsider art in 1972 as an English equivalent to the French art brut ('raw art'). A reader might be exposed to hallucinatory paintings, eye-bogglingly meticulous pen-and-ink drawings, or an alien-looking yard in which branches and jagged structures are wrapped in aluminum foil. 'It takes a while to settle down to read it properly, because it's so rich,' Cardinal says. 'You don't just take a bite for breakfast. You've really got to deal with it.'